picture taken from Garcia-Ruiz, J.M. et al. 2007 Geology 35(4), 327.
While several have made conjectures as to how these crystals formed, none had been investigated carefully until now. Garcia-Ruiz and coworkers set out to explain the formation and growth of the Naica megacrystals after closely considering several factors. First, gypsum is slightly soluble in water, with a maximal solubility observed at 58 degrees C; conveniently, water samples from the Naica mines have temperatures ranging from 48-59 degrees C. Thus, the water found in the area is slightly supersaturated for gypsum and slightly undersaturated for the anhydrite form of calcium sulfate, suggesting a self-feeding mechanism. In other words, crystal growth might have been driven by a solution controlled anhydrite-gypsum phase transition. Calculation of the nucleation rate indicated that this suggested mechanism is a probable one, but only within a very narrow range of temperatures--46 to 60 degrees C. Such calculations indicate that these crystals have been growing in the caves at Naica for over one million years!
For more information:
The Largest Crystals on Earth
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